The media unit behind Risalah newsletter, a publication featuring articles by fighters from "Islamic State Jammu & Kashmir (ISJK)," transformed it into a full magazine in the style of the IS' Rumiyah, and pledged that it will "act as a medium of communication between the soldiers of the Khilafah and the common masses".

In the seventh issue of "Risalah" newsletter, a periodical from the self-described "Islamic State Jammu & Kashmir" (ISJK), an article attributed to a Kashmiri fighter urged fellow countrymen in the local security forces to "repent" and carry out inside attacks, or await "hellfire".

An article attributed to an Indian member of Islamic State Jammu and Kashmir (ISJK), and the first to be provided in English as well as Urdu in the "Risalah" newsletter, promotes allegiance to the IS despite its detractors.

An article attributed to a member of Islamic State Jammu and Kashmir (ISJK) and featured in the fifth issue of "Risalah" newsletter explains the IS' methodology and calls the Kashmir Jihad of the past a "myth and an industry" created by "tyrants".

Al-Burhan Media Center, representing Islamic State Jammu and Kashmir (ISJK), released the third and fourth issues of the "Risalah" newsletter, featuring fighters discussing faith and jihad and questioning Hizb-ul-Mujahideen for executing spies.

A media unit representing "Islamic State Jammu and Kashmir" (ISJK) released the second issue of the "Risalah" newsletter, consisting of a message attributed to a Kashmiri fighter recalling an experience with a slain Islamic State Khorasan Province (ISKP) member.

Islamic State (IS)-aligned Kashmiri groups distributed an audio attributed to Ehtisham Bilal (AKA Abu Muhammad al-Inghamasi), a student-turned fighter, discussing his motivation for joining what is known as "Islamic State Jammu and Kashmir" (ISJK).

White Supremacists discussed a supposed “violent” leftist strike if the Kavanaugh confirmation concludes successfully, and many welcomed the idea of violence, seemingly happy to accept any reason to react with violence.

Al-Tazkirah Media, a mouthpiece for "Islamic State Jammu and Kashmir" (ISJK), said that the militant killed by unidentified gunmen in Srinagar on September 8, 2018, was the ISJK leader, and tempered the charge of responsibility against Hizb-ul-Mujahideen.